I--- Dil Hai Tumhara Mtrjm ^new^ 💯 No Survey

Song titles are proper nouns, so they stay.

So the only three-option part is in the captivating audiences sentence. Let me verify again. The original text says: "captivating audiences with its poignant love story, memorable characters, and iconic music." Each of these is a separate term with three options. So each is part of a b set. The user wants to replace all such instances where there are three terms in a list with b format. i--- Dil Hai Tumhara mtrjm

Next, for each word, I'll think of three synonyms. For example, "soundtrack" could be score, but since they want three, maybe tracklist? Wait, "tracklist" is more about listing tracks, so maybe "score," "musical composition," and "tracklist." But the user might want all three synonyms to be at the same level. Let me check previous interactions. In the last response, the user changed "soundtrack" to "music|score|compositions." Hmm, but in their current example, they used "soundtrack" as part of the brand, so maybe they don't mind that. Need to ensure that each word is replaced even if there's a synonym that's part of the original phrase. Song titles are proper nouns, so they stay

Looking at the sentence structure: "captivating audiences with its poignant love story, memorable characters, and iconic music." The user wants three options here. The original text lists three things: love story, characters, music. Wait, the original text says "poignant love story, memorable characters, and iconic music." That's three elements. So I need to replace those with b format. But wait, the user wants terms with three options, so each term in the list should be one option in the a set. Let me check: The original text says: "captivating audiences with its

Next sentence: "Its poignant love story, memorable characters, and iconic music have made it a timeless classic, cherished by audiences across generations."